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Hartnett, Stephen John – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
The "twisted cyber spy" affair began in 2010, when Google was attacked by Chinese cyber-warriors charged with stealing Google's intellectual property, planting viruses in its computers, and hacking the accounts of Chinese human rights activists. In the ensuing international embroglio, the US mainstream press, corporate leaders, and White…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Rhetoric, Intellectual Property, Global Approach
National Academies Press, 2009
The scientific research enterprise is built on a foundation of trust. Scientists trust that the results reported by others are valid. Society trusts that the results of research reflect an honest attempt by scientists to describe the world accurately and without bias. But this trust will endure only if the scientific community devotes itself to…
Descriptors: Scientists, Scientific Research, Science and Society, Responsibility
Busingye, Janice; Keim, Wiebke – International Social Science Journal, 2009
Knowledge has increasingly become an essential resource in the global economy, hence the capitalist tendency to regard it as a form of capital and as a motor for innovation and profit. Like any other capitalist commodity, conflicts over the ownership and use of various types of knowledge have arisen, thereby calling for legal protection.…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Copyrights, Global Approach, Social Systems
Band, Jonathan – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2009
Duane Webster's leadership in the area of copyright policy demonstrates three characteristics: perseverance, pragmatism, and partnership. These characteristics are visible in the foundation and operation of the Library Copyright Alliance (LCA). LCA's successful campaign to defeat a legislative initiative in the 110th Congress to increase copyright…
Descriptors: Copyrights, Educational Legislation, Profiles, Federal Legislation
Fister, Barbara – Thought & Action, 2010
Libraries are an interesting instance of the radical transformations that higher education is experiencing. The neoliberal turn that has led to the commodification of what scholars do--teach and create knowledge--has had a profound effect on the academic library. But the political economy of the transformed library is invisible to many if not most…
Descriptors: Financial Problems, Intellectual Property, Academic Libraries, Library Administration
Veltsos, Jennifer R.; Veltsos, Christophe – Business Communication Quarterly, 2010
Technology-mediated communication, or "new media," such as blogs, Twitter, wikis, and social network sites, can be an endless source of ideas for activities or inspiration for classroom discussion. Many instructors ask students to monitor current events by following keywords and industry leaders on Twitter and reading both corporate and…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Business Communication, Electronic Publishing, Intellectual Property
Bellin, Robert M.; Bruno, Mary K.; Farrow, Melissa A. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2010
We have developed a 9-week undergraduate laboratory series focused on the purification and characterization of "Thermus aquaticus" DNA polymerase (Taq). Our aim was to provide undergraduate biochemistry students with a full-semester continuing project simulating a research-like experience, while having each week's procedure focus on a single…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Undergraduate Students, Science Laboratories, Biochemistry
Husick, Lawrence A. – Foreign Policy Research Institute, 2008
When individuals and populations of organisms face resource scarcity, they respond in various ways: by substituting other resources, by expanding or changing geographic range, or by finding ways to compete more successfully for the resources. Humans have also responded to scarcity through innovation: inventing new ideas and tools with which to…
Descriptors: Innovation, Intellectual Property, History, Change
Uys, L. R. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2008
The article explores the issue of protecting the good name and reputation of institutions and organisations in which research is being done. It explores current ethical codes in this regard, as well as legal provision for such protection. The issue of balancing the right of the researchers to share information about institutions in which research…
Descriptors: Reputation, Ethics, Researchers, Intellectual Property
Marchionini, Gary – Educational Technology, 2008
Many universities are providing video content such as lectures on the Web. The trend away from strong restrictions on instructional content toward more open-access policies offers exciting possibilities for extending classrooms beyond the campus but also brings new management challenges. This article describes some of the opportunities and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Internet, Teaching Methods, Nontraditional Education
Mirowski, Philip – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2008
Although the push to get universities to accumulate IP by commercializing their scientific research was a conscious movement, dealing with the blowback in the form of contracts over the transfer of research tools and inputs, called materials transfer agreements (MTAs), was greeted by universities as an afterthought. Faculty often regarded them as…
Descriptors: Research Tools, Scientific Research, Intellectual Property, Higher Education
Thompson, Celia; Pennycook, Alastair – Education Canada, 2008
In this article, the authors argue that while the term plagiarism has long been used as an unhelpful and moralistic catch-all to describe a range of textual "crimes." educators are moving into an era of both increased diversity of student populations and increased capacity to detect textual borrowings through new forms of software. To rely on the…
Descriptors: Feminism, Plagiarism, Ownership, Literary Devices
National Science Foundation, 2012
The United States holds a preeminent position in science and engineering (S&E) in the world, derived in large part from its long history of public and private investment in S&E research and development (R&D) and education. Investment in R&D, science, technology, and education correlate strongly with economic growth, as well the development of a…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Engineering Education, Research and Development, Engineering
Chang, Ho-Jun – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This dissertation deals with the tense relation between the visibility of unauthorized economic practices and the invisibility of law in Zhongguancun (ZGC) Beijing, a Chinese information technology (IT) industry center dubbed "China's Silicon Valley." This dissertation ethnographically examines the double process of extra-legal/illegal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Information Technology, Industry, Intellectual Property
Powers, Joshua B.; Campbell, Eric G. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2009
In 1907, Frederick Cottrell, professor of chemistry at the University of California-Berkeley and father of the modern academic patent, worried that if universities became too directly involved in patenting and licensing operations, their thirst for profits could lead to the erosion of the openness necessary for academic science to flourish. For…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research Universities, School Business Relationship, Intellectual Property

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